The Day

11-year-old killed in Iowa school shooting a joyful boy known as ‘Smiley’

- By NICHOLAS RICCARDI

— Ahmir Des Moines, Iowa Jolliff dashed out of his home in Perry Thursday morning, eager to see his friends on the first day back to school after winter break.

It was vintage Ahmir — known as “Smiley” around his house — an 11-year-old whirlwind of cheerful activity. He kept a trunk of toys unlocked in the front yard so anyone could play with them, his mother said. He loved soccer, played the tuba and sang in choir. He had a habit of touching people on their shoulder and asking them how their day was.

Ahmir was killed Thursday before class even started, when a 17-year-old student at Perry High School opened fire in the cafeteria. The sixth-grader, who attended the middle school that’s connected to the high school, was shot three times, authoritie­s said. Seven others, including the school’s principal, two other staff members and four students, were wounded before the shooter died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Ahmir’s mother, Erica Jolliff, said on that morning, her son couldn’t wait to get to school and left minutes ahead of his mom and sister, who is in ninth-grade. Jolliff soon found herself scouring the streets for her children when authoritie­s sped into town and blocked access to the complex after the shooting. She found her daughter unharmed. But she couldn’t find Ahmir.

“I just had a feeling he was still in that building,” she said.

Jolliff said she was horrified to hear that friends of 17-yearold Dylan Butler, whom police have identified as the shooter, say he was bullied for years and that teachers and school officials did nothing to protect him.

“We send our condolence­s to the family of Dylan; they’re in our prayers and we’re truly sorry for his loss as well,” she said in an interview late Friday with The Associated Press.

The shooting happened just after 7:30 a.m. Thursday, shortly before classes were set to begin on the first day back after winter break. Iowa Division of Criminal Investigat­ion spokesman Mitch Mortvedt told the AP the shooting started in the cafeteria, where students from several grades were eating breakfast, then spilled outside the cafeteria but was contained to the north end of the school.

Authoritie­s said Butler had a pump-action shotgun and a small-caliber handgun. Mortvedt said authoritie­s also found a “pretty rudimentar­y” improvised explosive device in Butler’s belongings, and it was rendered safe.

Two friends and their mother who spoke with the AP said Butler was a quiet person who had been bullied since elementary school. Investigat­ors are still working to get a “good grasp of who Dylan was,” Mortvedt said.

 ?? ERICA JOLLIFF VIA AP ?? Ahmir Jolliff, who was killed in a school shooting on Thursday, poses at one of his birthday parties in this undated photo provided by his mother.
ERICA JOLLIFF VIA AP Ahmir Jolliff, who was killed in a school shooting on Thursday, poses at one of his birthday parties in this undated photo provided by his mother.

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